A quick and dirty update on american misadventure to afghanistan...
Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning, internationally syndicated columnist, writing and commenting for the top media outlets of the United States, Canada UK, France, Gulf states, Turkey, Malaysia and Pakistan.
Afghanistan – Fool’s War
Global Research, October 13, 2016
Oriental Review 12 October 2016
Fifteen years ago this week, the US launched the longest war in
its history: the invasion and occupation of remote Afghanistan.
Neighboring Pakistan was forced to facilitate the American invasion or
‘be bombed back to the stone age.’
America was furious after the bloody 9/11 attacks. The Bush
administration had been caught sleeping on guard duty. Many Americans
believed 9/11 was an inside job by pro-war neocons.
Afghanistan was picked as the target of US vengeance even though the
9/11 attacks were hatched (if in fact done from abroad) in Germany and
Spain. The suicide attackers made clear their kamikaze mission was to
punish the US for ‘occupying’ the holy land of Saudi Arabia, and for
Washington’s open-ended support of Israel in its occupation of
Palestine.
This rational was quickly obscured by the Bush administration that
claimed the 9/11 attackers, most of whom were Saudis, were motivated by
hatred of American ‘values’ and ‘freedoms.’ This nonsense planted the
seeds of the rising tide of Islamophobia that we see today and the faux
‘war on terror.’
An anti-communist jihadist, Osama bin Laden, was inflated and demonized
into America’s Great Satan. The supposed ‘terrorist training camps’ in
Afghanistan were, as I saw with my eyes, camps where Pakistani
intelligence trained jihadists to fight in India-occupied Kashmir.
Afghanistan, remote, bleak and mountainous, was rightly known as ‘the
graveyard of empires.’ These included Alexander the Great, Genghis
Khan, Timur, the Moguls and Sikhs. The British Empire invaded
Afghanistan three times in the 19th century. The Soviet Union, world’s
greatest land power, invaded in 1979, seeking a corridor to the Arabian
Sea and Gulf.
All were defeated by the fierce Pashtun warrior tribes of the Hindu
Kush. But the fool George W. Bush rushed in where angels feared to
tread, in a futile attempt to conquer an unconquerable people for whom
war was their favorite pastime. I was with the Afghan mujahidin when
fighting the Soviet occupation in the 1980’s, and again the newly-formed
Taliban in the early 1990’s. As I wrote in my book on this subject, ‘War at the Top of the World,’ the Pashtun warriors were the bravest men I’d ever seen. They had only ancient weapons but possessed boundless courage.
During the 2001 US invasion, the Americans allied themselves to the
heroin and opium-dealing Tajik Northern Alliance, to former Communist
allies of the Soviets, and to the northern Uzbeks, blood foes of the
Pashtun and former Soviet Communist allies.
Taliban, which had absolutely nothing to do with 9/11, had shut down
90% of Afghanistan’s heroin and opium trade. The US-allied Northern
Alliance restored it, making Afghanistan again the world’s leading
supplier of heroin and opium. US occupation forces, backed by immense
tactical air power, allied themselves with the most criminal elements in
Afghanistan and installed a puppet regime of CIA assets. The old
Communist secret police, notorious for their record of torture and
atrocities, was kept in power by CIA to fight Taliban.
Last week, Washington’s Special Inspector General for Afghan Relief
(SIGAR) issued a totally damning report showing how mass corruption,
bribery, payoffs and drug money had fatally undermined US efforts to
build a viable Afghan society.
What’s more, without 24/7 US air cover, Washington’s yes-men in Kabul
would be quickly swept away. The Afghan Army and police have no loyalty
to the regime; they fight only for the Yankee dollar. Like Baghdad,
Kabul is a US-guarded island in a sea of animosity.
A report by
Global Research has estimated the 15-year Afghan War and the Iraq War
had cost the US $6 trillion. Small wonder when gasoline trucked up to
Afghanistan from Pakistan’s coast it costs the Pentagon $400 per gallon.
Some estimates put the war cost at $33,000 per citizen. But Americans
do not pay this cost through a special war tax, as it should be. Bush
ordered the total costs of the Iraq and Afghan wars be concealed in the
national debt.
Officially, 2,216 American soldiers have died in Afghanistan and
20,049 were seriously wounded. Some 1,173 US mercenaries have also been
killed. Large numbers of US financed mercenaries still remain in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
Noble Peace Prize winner Barack Obama promised to withdraw nearly all US troops from Afghanistan by 2016.
Instead, more US troops are on the way to protect the Kabul puppet
regime from its own people. Taliban and its dozen-odd allied resistance
movements (‘terrorists’ in Pentagon speak faithfully parroted by the US
media) are steadily gaining territory and followers.
Last week, the US dragooned NATO and other satrap states to a ‘voluntary’ donor conference for
Afghanistan where they had to cough up another $15.2 billion and likely
send some more troops to this hopeless conflict. Washington cannot bear
to admit defeat by tiny Afghanistan or see this strategic nation fall
into China’s sphere.
Ominously, the US is encouraging India to play a much larger role in
Afghanistan, thus planting the seeds of a dangerous
Pakistani-Indian-Chinese confrontation there.
There was no mention of the 800lb gorilla in the conference room:
Afghanistan’s role as the world’s by now largest heroin/opium/morphine
producer – all under the proud auspices of the United States government.
The new US president will inherit this embarrassing problem.
Eric S. Margolis is an award-winning, internationally syndicated columnist, writing and commenting for the top media outlets of the United States, Canada UK, France, Gulf states, Turkey, Malaysia and Pakistan.
The original source of this article is Oriental Review
Copyright © Eric Margolis, Oriental Review, 2016
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